The Shoulder
The Shoulder
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Property damageswift-tern-105

Other driver's insurance wants to lowball my totaled car — how do I push back?

So my car got totaled about two weeks ago when someone ran a red light and T-boned me. Thankfully I walked away, but my car did not. I filed a claim with the at-fault driver's insurance pretty much immediately and finally got a response yesterday with their initial offer for the vehicle's value.

Here's the thing — I bought this car about three years ago, kept it in genuinely great shape, fresh tires, no rust, full service history, the works. It was 100% paid off and I fully expected to drive it for at least another four or five years. The number they came back with feels like they just punched my zip code into some algorithm and called it a day. It's noticeably lower than anything I'm seeing for comparable cars actually listed for sale near me.

I've never dealt with a total loss situation before. A few questions I'm trying to work through:

  • Is it normal for the first offer to be this far off from actual market value?
  • Can I actually negotiate, or is their number basically final?
  • What kind of evidence or documentation helps the most when pushing back?
  • Should I be talking to my own insurance at all even though the other driver was clearly at fault?

I'm not trying to profit off this — I just want enough to actually replace what I had. Feeling a little overwhelmed by all of it and would really appreciate hearing from people who've been through this.

11replies

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11 replies

  • 18
    careful-heron-103

    Yes, the first offer being low is almost a given. I went through this last year and their opening number was laughably short of what similar cars were actually selling for. I spent about a week pulling listings from multiple sites — same make, model, year, mileage, condition — and sent them a written counter with those comps attached. They came back meaningfully higher on the second round. It felt uncomfortable to push back but it genuinely worked. Don't just accept the first number.

    • 21
      genuine-stoat-070

      A few practical things worth knowing: First, you generally have the right to dispute their comparable vehicle selection — ask them to send you the full CCC or Mitchell report (whatever they used) so you can see exactly how they got to that number. Second, yes, loop in your own insurer even if the other driver was at fault. Your own collision coverage or uninsured/underinsured provisions might be relevant depending on how this plays out, and your insurer has some incentive to advocate for you. Third, keep every receipt, every communication, and document your car's condition with whatever photos or records you have.

  • 18
    hearty-otter-363

    Three things: get comps, dispute in writing, don't sign anything until you're satisfied. That's really the whole playbook for the vehicle value fight. It's tedious but it's not complicated.

  • 15
    plain-finch-457

    The fact that you kept full service records and the car was in great shape is actually a real asset here — that's exactly the kind of documentation that supports a higher valuation. A lot of people can't prove condition, but it sounds like you can. Use it.

  • 11
    spry-marten-278

    I worked in auto claims for a long time, so I'll be straight with you: that first offer is almost never their best offer. The valuation tools adjusters use have known gaps — they sometimes pull from a wider geographic area or weight older sales data. Your job is to show them current local listings for comparable vehicles. Print them out, highlight the prices, and formally dispute the valuation in writing. Most carriers have an actual dispute process for total loss valuations — ask them specifically about it. Being politely persistent in writing (not just on the phone) makes a real difference.

  • 10
    clever-marten-872

    Not legal advice, but — total loss disputes are actually one of the more winnable fights for regular people because the math is relatively transparent. Market value is market value, and if you can demonstrate with real comparable listings that their number is off, they usually move. Where it gets more complicated is if there are injury claims layered on top, in which case having someone in your corner who handles this stuff professionally is worth considering. Most PI attorneys will do a free consult and can at least tell you if the offer is in a reasonable ballpark.

    • 3
      hopeful-commuter338

      Wish I had seen this a month ago — would have saved me a lot of stress.

  • 9
    silent-crow-959

    Just want to check in on the 'thankfully I walked away' part — please make sure you actually got checked out by a doctor if you haven't already. T-bone impacts can do things to your neck and back that don't show up until days later. I've seen people feel fine at the scene and then be dealing with real issues weeks out. Get it documented even if you feel okay right now.

  • 6
    clear-seal-377

    Do NOT just call and complain — put everything in writing. Phone conversations are easy for them to ignore or misrepresent later. Email or certified mail creates a paper trail. Also, don't let them pressure you with a deadline on accepting the offer without understanding what you're signing away.

    • 6
      honest-dreamer637

      Did you have to escalate, or did they come around after the first ask?

    • 6
      steady-wolf-670

      This sounds so stressful, I'm sorry you're dealing with it on top of the shock of the accident itself. Please don't feel like you have to just take their first number because it feels awkward to argue. You did nothing wrong and you deserve to actually be made whole here.